Hosts Jeff Benjamin and Bruce Kelly tackle the Wells Fargo riddle, with its budget cuts that sent a sizable group of advisers packing. The Social Security trust funds, created to help pay future retirement benefits when payroll tax revenues alone are no longer sufficient, will run dry sooner than previously predicted due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the recession it triggered. Mary Beth Franklin joins to discuss her important cover story.
0:30-7:30 - Wells Fargo lays off advisers -- what’s going on?
7:30-29:30 - Mary Beth Franklin interview
7:30-11:30 - The latest outlook for filling the trust fund gap
11:30-15:10 - The opportunity for converting to or contributing to a Roth in the current tax environment
15:10-18:00 - The inevitability of a solution vs. the ongoing political impasse
18:00-22:15 - The varying projections about when the trust fund might run out, and how it should or should not affect individuals’ retirement decisions
22:15-27:15 - What’s missing at the top of the funnel in contributions to Social Security
27:15-29:00 - The role advisers can play
Bruce is joined this week by new InvestmentNews managing editor Emile Hallez to discuss what happens now that the election is over and we know who the next president is going to be.
Bruce is joined once again by InvestmentNews managing editor James Burton to discuss the ongoing consolidation and potential for job cuts at one of the country’s largest broker-dealer networks.
Bruce mixes it up this week and brings in InvestmentNews managing editor James Burton to discuss the story that rocked the newsroom last week – the surprise termination of LPL CEO Dan Arnold.
Bruce sits down with Vance Barse, founder and wealth strategist at Your Dedicated Fiduciary, to discuss different fee models and the passionate “hourly fee bros.”